May 6, 2020 | BY Jim Garamone , DOD News
One of the toughest training courses in the military has
reopened with Navy special warfare recruits adapting to operating in the time
of coronavirus.
Navy Capt. Bart Randall, the commodore of the Naval Special
Warfare Center in Coronado, California, said training for new maritime special
operators, or SEALs, began again May 4 after being suspended in March due to
the COVID-19 pandemic.
Randall made changes to the training regimen for special
warfare personnel. Instructors will wear masks and gloves and use megaphones
rather than yelling face-to-face. The number of students in a room will also be
reduced, he said. ''Our classes will maximize bubble-to-bubble travel in order
to limit personal contact outside of their training cohorts, and they're going
to remain on base until after the candidates complete Hell Week,'' Randall
said.
The students will be quarantined together, and their health
will be monitored daily.
There will be no reduction in the standards that students
must meet to become SEALs or special warfare combatant-craft crewmen.
''I am confident in our constant medical assessment that we
have with these students,'' Randall told reporters during a conference call.
''I'm not afraid to continue [to] train or, if conditions should change, I will
pause training. Because the No. 1 thing to me is the health and welfare of
these students.''
Students who come down with the virus will be pulled from
the course immediately and go through the full medical procedures the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention recommends, the captain said.
Right now, no one at Coronado has tested positive for
coronavirus, Randall said. The center is part of the test protocol that gives
faster test results.
Although 100 percent of the personnel at the center have not
yet been tested, they are moving in that direction, Randall said.
The pause in the course should not affect the yearly number
of special operators the center produces. The number of people who pass the
legendary tough course varies from cohort to cohort. Yearly, only about 25
percent of those in the basic course qualify to become SEALs or special warfare
combatant-craft crewmen.
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